Hear from Our Customers
You’re not remodeling your bathroom because it’s fun. You’re doing it because the layout doesn’t work, the fixtures are outdated, or you’re tired of looking at the same worn tile every morning. Maybe you’re preparing to sell and know buyers in Montauk expect more than builder-grade finishes.
Whatever your reason, you want it done right. No callbacks. No surprise charges halfway through. No dragging a two-week job into two months.
A finished bathroom renovation means starting your day in a space that feels clean, functional, and yours. It means walk-in showers with proper drainage, vanities with storage that makes sense, and lighting that doesn’t make you squint. It’s the difference between tolerating your morning routine and actually enjoying it.
We’ve spent almost ten years handling bathroom remodels across Suffolk County. We’ve worked in Montauk homes where ocean air corrodes fixtures faster, where humidity demands better ventilation, and where homeowners expect quality that matches their property values.
We’re not the cheapest bathroom remodel contractors you’ll find. We use quality materials, pull proper permits, and don’t cut corners on waterproofing or structural work. That approach costs more upfront but saves you from mold remediation, leaks, and redo jobs down the line.
Our pricing is transparent from the start. No hidden fees. No upsells mid-project. Just honest work at fair rates.
We start with a walkthrough at your home. You show us what’s not working, what you want changed, and what your budget looks like. We measure everything, check the existing plumbing and electrical, and talk through options that make sense for your space.
From there, we put together a detailed estimate. Line items are broken out so you know what you’re paying for—demo, plumbing, tile work, fixtures, labor. If something needs to change, we discuss it before any work starts.
Once you approve, we handle permits and scheduling. Demo comes first, then rough plumbing and electrical updates. After inspections clear, we move into tile installation, vanity and fixture setup, and finishing work like paint and trim. We coordinate everything—you’re not chasing down electricians or waiting on tile deliveries.
Throughout the project, you’ll know what’s happening and when. No ghosting. No vague timelines. Just steady progress until your bathroom renovation is complete and you’re using it.
Ready to get started?
A full bathroom remodel with us covers everything from demolition to final walkthrough. We handle structural changes if you’re moving walls or relocating fixtures. Plumbing and electrical get updated to code—critical in older Montauk homes where systems haven’t been touched in decades.
Tile work includes waterproofing membranes, proper slope for drainage, and grout that’s sealed correctly. We install walk-in showers with frameless glass, soaking tubs, modern vanities, and fixtures that hold up to daily use. Ventilation gets upgraded because Montauk’s humidity will destroy a bathroom without proper airflow.
If you’re doing a partial bathroom renovation—maybe just replacing a bathtub or upgrading shower installation—we handle that too. Not every project needs a full gut job. Sometimes you just need a competent residential bathroom remodeling contractor who can swap fixtures without tearing apart walls unnecessarily.
Montauk homeowners often ask about timelines. Small updates take two to three weeks. Full bathroom reconstruction runs four to eight weeks depending on size and scope. We’ll give you a realistic schedule upfront, not an optimistic guess that falls apart by week two.
Most bathroom renovations in Montauk run between $18,000 and $45,000 depending on size and finishes. A small guest bath with basic updates sits on the lower end. A primary bathroom with custom tile, frameless shower, and high-end fixtures pushes toward the upper range.
Costs break down into labor, materials, and permits. Labor typically accounts for 40-50% of your budget. Materials vary widely—builder-grade vanities and tile cost far less than natural stone and custom cabinetry. Permits in Suffolk County add another layer of expense but they’re not optional if you’re moving plumbing or electrical.
If a contractor quotes you $10,000 for a full bathroom remodel in Montauk, that’s a red flag. Quality work costs money. Cheap bids usually mean shortcuts on waterproofing, unlicensed subcontractors, or change orders that double your price halfway through.
Yes, if you’re doing anything beyond cosmetic updates. Replacing a toilet or vanity without moving plumbing lines usually doesn’t require a permit. But moving fixtures, updating electrical, or changing the layout does.
Suffolk County building codes are strict, and inspectors in Montauk know what to look for. Unpermitted work creates problems when you sell—buyers’ inspectors flag it, and you’ll either need to bring everything up to code or negotiate a lower sale price.
Permits aren’t just bureaucracy. They ensure your plumbing is vented correctly, your electrical is grounded properly, and your waterproofing won’t fail in two years. We pull permits for every job that needs them and schedule inspections so you’re never stuck with code violations.
A straightforward bathroom remodel takes three to five weeks. That includes demo, plumbing and electrical updates, tile installation, fixture setup, and finishing work. More complex projects—moving walls, adding square footage, or dealing with structural issues—can stretch to eight weeks.
Weather affects timelines in Montauk. If we’re waiting on materials delayed by storms or if humidity slows tile curing, that adds days. We build buffer time into schedules because unexpected issues come up—rotted subfloors, outdated plumbing that needs replacing, electrical panels that can’t handle new loads.
You’ll have limited or no access to the bathroom during construction. If it’s your only full bath, plan accordingly. We work efficiently, but rushing tile work or skipping proper curing time creates problems you’ll deal with for years.
Walk-in showers are the most requested feature in bathroom renovations right now. They’re easier to access, simpler to clean, and they make small bathrooms feel larger. Frameless glass, rainfall showerheads, and built-in benches turn a basic shower into something you actually want to use.
But if you have kids or plan to sell soon, keeping one bathtub in the house makes sense. Families with young children need tubs, and some buyers won’t consider homes without at least one. If you’re remodeling a primary bathroom and have another tub elsewhere, go with the walk-in shower. If it’s your only bathroom, think twice.
Space matters too. A quality walk-in shower needs at least 36×36 inches, ideally more. Cramped showers feel claustrophobic and don’t function well. We’ll measure your space and talk through options that work for your layout and how you actually use the bathroom.
Start with licensing and insurance. In New York, contractors need proper licenses to pull permits and carry liability insurance in case something goes wrong. Ask for proof. If they hesitate, walk away.
Check references, but don’t just skim Google reviews. Ask for contact info from recent clients with similar projects. Call them. Ask about communication, timeline accuracy, and how the contractor handled problems. Every project hits snags—what matters is how they’re resolved.
Get detailed estimates from at least three bathroom renovation contractors. Compare line items, not just total price. The lowest bid often means someone’s cutting corners or planning to hit you with change orders later. Look for transparency—clear breakdowns of labor, materials, permits, and timeline.
Pay attention to communication during the estimate process. If they’re hard to reach now, they’ll be worse once they have your deposit. You want a contractor who responds promptly, explains things clearly, and doesn’t pressure you into decisions.
Yes, and it saves money. Keeping your toilet, shower, and sink in the same locations cuts costs significantly because you’re not rerouting drain lines or water supply. You can still upgrade everything—new tile, modern fixtures, better lighting, improved storage—without the expense of replumbing.
Moving plumbing makes sense if your current layout doesn’t work. Maybe the toilet is too close to the vanity, or you want a larger shower where the tub currently sits. Those changes improve function but add cost and complexity.
In older Montauk homes, sometimes plumbing needs to move whether you want it to or not. If your drain lines are cast iron from the 1960s and corroding, or if your supply lines are galvanized steel that’s restricting water flow, updating them during a remodel prevents bigger problems later. We’ll assess your existing systems during the estimate and let you know what makes sense for your situation and budget.